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This site is the inspiration of a former reporter/photographer for one of New England's largest daily newspapers and for various magazines. The intent is to direct readers to interesting political articles, and we urge you to visit the source sites. Any comments may be noted on site or directed to KarisChaf at gmail.

Saturday, April 12, 2014

Kathleen Sebelius has been let out a rear door of the Health and Human Services Department, and her exit is an opportunity for getting some ObamaCare accountability. President Obama tapped Sylvia Mathews Burwell as her replacement on Friday. The Senate should try to use her confirmation to expose the law's continuing troubles and improve HHS transparency.

Ms. Burwell, the White House budget director, was confirmed for that job 96-0 last April. But the bureaucratic sprawl of HHS deserves more than another congressional rubber stamp. Beyond the ObamaCare exchanges, the HHS Secretary controls a $1.01 trillion budget for fiscal 2015 with 79,540 employees that includes Medicare, Medicaid, the Food and Drug Administration, Head Start, the National Institutes and dozens of other programs.

Ms. Burwell is by all accounts a less inept administrator than Ms. Sebelius, even if this is another second-term promotion for a personal and ideological Obama loyalist. Like Treasury Secretary Jack Lew, Ms. Burwell is an acolyte of former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin and close to the White House's Mr. Fix-it, John Podesta. HHS Secretaries usually have more independent stature.

A major reason that ObamaCare's prescriptive regulations and first six months have been such a rolling failure is that decision-making is centralized in the Oval Office. Most of the important choices were never Ms. Sebelius's. They were usually first resolved to the satisfaction of the political shop. Ms. Burwell has been part of this insular policy-making.

On that point, Senators cannot meaningfully exercise their advice and consent role without more information about the reality of ObamaCare's performance. The White House is enjoying a sugar high from the current bad-news lull, but HHS's credibility has become a running joke among all but the most reliable partisans.

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